06 June 2013

Reversing course, just in time

Linda Loyd has an article in The Philadelphia Inquirer about the TSA:
In a sharp reversal of a proposal to allow knives in the cabins of passenger planes, the Transportation Security Administration said that it would continue to ban small pocket knives, golf clubs, toy baseball bats, and hockey and lacrosse sticks on airplanes.
The agency said that after "extensive engagement" with law enforcement officials, passenger advocates, flight attendants, pilots, air marshals, and screeners, it would "continue to enforce the current prohibited items list" of what airline passengers may carry onto planes.
TSA administrator John Pistole touched off a firestorm when he announced the rule change. Last month, 145 members of Congress signed a letter asking Pistole to keep the current policy.
"TSA's top priority continues to be expansion of efforts to implement a layered, risk-based security approach to passenger screening," the agency said. "We will continue to take steps to improve our ever-evolving security posture while also improving the experience of the traveling public."
TSA maintained that relaxing restrictions on small knives and other banned objects would align the United States with international standards and free security screeners to focus on a greater threat: explosive devices. The TSA confiscates two thousand knives a day at airports.
The Coalition of Flight Attendant Unions, representing ninety thousand flight attendants, commended the TSA for keeping knives with blades shorter than 2.36 inches off passenger planes. "Terrorists armed only with knives killed thousands of Americans on 9/11," the group said. "As the women and men on the front lines in the air, we vowed to do everything in our power to protect passengers and flight crews from harm and prevent that type of atrocity from happening ever again."
Small knives were banned, along with other sharp objects, after the terrorist attacks.
In 2005, the ban was relaxed after cockpit doors were reinforced and pilots were trained to carry guns. Currently, passengers may carry four-inch scissors, knitting needles, and small hand tools such as screwdrivers. The potential threat has shifted to terrorists' attempting to bring down planes with bombs.
Rico says it's just as well; there'd have been endless arguments about 'no, no, it's small enough'. (But he can only hear Crocodile Dundee saying: "That's not a knife"...

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